Parental Perceptions of Health Status and Psychologic Adjustment of Children With Asthma

PEDIATRICS ◽  
1989 ◽  
Vol 83 (1) ◽  
pp. 26-30
Author(s):  
James M. Perrin ◽  
William E. MacLean ◽  
Ellen C. Perrin

The relationship between severity of illness and psychologic adjustment was evaluated in 46 children with asthma. Two measures of the severity of asthma were used: the first, a composite objective measure based on clinical history and the second, parental estimates of the severity of their child's illness. Psychologic adjustment was measured by the Health Resources Inventory, a parental report of childhood behavior. Parental estimates of severity were correlated significantly with the objective measure of severity (r = .39; P < .01), although a concordance value of 54% indicated marked lack of agreement between parental and objective ratings. As a group, children in this study achieved apparently normal adjustment scores, although scores ranged widely across all categories of severity. Children whose parents ranked their asthma as mild or severe had significantly lower adjustment scores (F = 3.28; P < .05) than did those children rated by their parents as having moderate asthma. Children's ranks on the composite objective measure of severity were not associated with their adjustment scores, although children with greater use of medication had lower adjustment scores than did children with little or moderate medication use (P < .05). The relationship of severity of illness to psychologic adjustment is complex. Children at all levels of severity may demonstrate problems of adjustment, suggesting that attention to psychologic risk should not be limited only to children with severe asthma.

2008 ◽  
Vol 113 (6) ◽  
pp. 427-438 ◽  
Author(s):  
Susan W. Harris ◽  
David Hessl ◽  
Beth Goodlin-Jones ◽  
Jessica Ferranti ◽  
Susan Bacalman ◽  
...  

Abstract Autism, which is common in individuals with fragile X syndrome, is often difficult to diagnose. We compared the diagnostic classifications of two measures for autism diagnosis, the ADOS and the ADI-R, in addition to the DSM-IV-TR in 63 males with this syndrome. Overall, 30% of the subjects met criteria for autistic disorder and 30% met criteria for PDD-NOS. The classifications on the ADOS and DSM-IV-TR were most similar, whereas the ADI-R classified subjects as autistic much more frequently. We further investigated the relationship of both FMRP and FMR1 mRNA to symptoms of autism in this cohort and found no significant relationship between the measures of autism and molecular features, including FMRP, FMR1 mRNA, and CGG repeat number.


2021 ◽  
pp. JFCP-19-00022
Author(s):  
Kyoung Tae Kim ◽  
Sherman D. Hanna ◽  
Dongyue Ying

The Survey of Consumer Finances (SCF) has included a 4-level risk tolerance measure since 1983. In 2016, the SCF also included an 11-level risk tolerance measure. We compare the two measures, and develop suggestions for using the new measure. While the new measure is seemingly simpler than the old measure, we demonstrate that it does not have a monotonic relationship with owning stock assets, with a pattern similar to the relationship of the old measure to stock ownership. We also identify complex patterns of factors related to different levels of the new measure, for instance education has a negative relationship at one level but positive at another level. Those using the new measure should consider the complex patterns we demonstrate.


2004 ◽  
Vol 113 (6) ◽  
pp. 1040-1045 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael Schatz ◽  
Mitchell P. Dombrowski ◽  
Robert Wise ◽  
Valerija Momirova ◽  
Mark Landon ◽  
...  

1980 ◽  
Vol 17 (4) ◽  
pp. 491-502 ◽  
Author(s):  
Steven M. Segal ◽  
Thomas V. Busse ◽  
Richard S. Mansfield

From a sample of 400 biologists drawn from American Men and Women of Science, 335 supplied information about their predoctoral experiences and accomplishments. These accomplishments and experiences were related to two measures of adult scientific achievement: (1) number of published articles, and (2) total number of citations received over a 5-year period. The number of published articles correlated significantly with 14 items, most of which could be classified into three conceptual groups: (1) predoctoral productivity, (2) excellence in predoctoral science work, and (3) early interest in science. The number of citations correlated significantly with 16 items, most of which clustered into three categories: (1) awards, (2) predoctoral productivity, and (3) early interest in science. It was concluded that potentially highly creative biologists can often be identified by predoctoral accomplishments and experiences at the graduate school level. Identification at the college level is more difficult, and at the high school level, extremely difficult.


Author(s):  
Boukhalfa Hamza , Ben Shikh Youcef

This study aims to study the relationship between emotional intelligence and the dimensions of transformational leadership among the teachers of the Institute of Science and Technology for physical and sports activities at the University of Mohammed Boudiaf in M’sila. It also aims to identify differences in the degree of emotional intelligence and leadership dimensions. The application of two measures of emotional intelligence and the other of the transformational leadership on a random sample of 30 teachers and the results indicate a relationship between the attributes of transformational leadership and emotional intelligence in the study sample. The results also revealed significant differences. The results of the study showed that the degree of the practice of transformational leadership was moderate. The research also identifies the most important recommendations: the need to review the criteria in which university leaders are chosen to be more in tune with the requirements of contemporary changes it supports transformational leadership in universities, attracting and retaining creators, and the need to design training seminars that value the role of emotional intelligence    


1994 ◽  
Vol 22 (4) ◽  
pp. 352-371 ◽  
Author(s):  
Beth Fletcher Brokaw ◽  
Keith J. Edwards

This study empirically tested the relationship of God image to level of object relations development in a Christian sample. Ninety-two undergraduate students from a religiously homogeneous population were tested with three measures of God image and three measures of object relations development. It was hypothesized that level of object relations development would show a significant positive correlation with images of God as loving and benevolent and a significant negative correlation with images of God as wrathful, controlling, and irrelevant. Scores on each of the God image instruments were correlated with scores on each of the measures of object relations development. The objective measure of object relations, the Ego Function Assessment Questionnaire-Revised (EFAQ-R), correlated significantly with all three measures of God image in the directions hypothesized. The two projective measures of object relations, the Rorschach and the Comprehensive Object Relations Profile (CORP), showed only a few significant correlations with God image scales. The strongest finding of this study was the consistent, positive correlation of multiple measures of loving God images with level of object relations development on the EFAQ-R.


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